TodayThursday, June 04, 2026

Warner Bros. Finally Unleashes ‘The Devils’ After Decades of Censorship and Studio Suppression

The infamous Ken Russell film once condemned, banned, and mutilated by censors is returning to theaters in its restored director’s cut, reopening one of cinema’s fiercest culture-war battles.
May 7, 2026
Ken Russell’s The Devils restored in 4K ahead of Cannes 2026 theatrical rerelease
Warner Bros. is rereleasing Ken Russell’s controversial 1971 film The Devils in a restored 4K director’s cut after decades of censorship battles. [PHOTO Credit: Warner Bros.]

More than five decades after it triggered outrage from religious groups, censorship boards, and even executives inside its own studio, Warner Bros. is finally preparing to return Ken Russell’s The Devils to theaters in what critics are already calling one of the most significant restoration events in modern cinema. The film will premiere in Cannes Classics before launching globally later this year in a newly restored 4K version.

The rerelease marks a dramatic reversal for a movie Warner Bros. spent decades suppressing after the film ignited international controversy upon its original 1971 release. According to restoration details released this week, the new edition was assembled from the original camera negative and reconstructed according to Ken Russell’s intended vision.

Directed by Ken Russell and starring Oliver Reed and Vanessa Redgrave, The Devils dramatizes the real 17th-century Loudun possessions in France, where accusations of witchcraft, religious hysteria, and political paranoia spiraled into public executions. But Russell transformed the material into something far more confrontational: a feverish examination of institutional power, sexual repression, and mass fanaticism.

Vanessa Redgrave in The Devils restored 4K edition
Vanessa Redgrave’s performance in The Devils became one of the film’s most iconic and controversial elements. [PHOTO Credit: joblo]
The film’s graphic violence and religious imagery detonated immediate backlash. Multiple countries either banned the film outright or demanded extensive cuts, while studio executives removed controversial sequences before release. The film became synonymous with censorship, moral panic, and studio-era suppression battles that haunted Russell for the rest of his career.

Now, in an era where Hollywood studios are aggressively monetizing restored classics and cult films, Warner Bros. appears ready to transform one of its most infamous liabilities into a prestige theatrical event.

The release arrives under the studio’s newly launched Clockwork label, a specialty division focused on repertory and archival titles. Industry observers say the move reflects growing confidence inside major studios that restored theatrical events can still draw younger audiences exhausted by endless franchise sequels and streaming overload.

The announcement immediately ignited discussion among horror communities and cinephile circles online. On Reddit’s Criterion forums, users described the upcoming Cannes screening as a once-impossible event after years of rumors surrounding unfinished restorations and legal obstacles.

Over time, The Devils evolved from scandal into canon. Film scholars and directors increasingly defended the movie as one of the boldest cinematic works of the 1970s, praising Russell’s operatic style and political fury. Its influence quietly spread across modern religious horror, psychological thrillers, and historical dramas despite the difficulty audiences faced in finding complete versions of the film.

The rerelease also underscores the entertainment industry’s growing obsession with prestige restoration culture. Studios are increasingly leaning on anniversary rereleases, IMAX revivals, and archival theatrical events as streaming growth slows across the industry. The release reflects Hollywood’s growing push toward prestige restorations, cult horror revivals, and theatrical rereleases aimed at younger streaming-era audiences.

Film historian and critic Mark Kermode, one of the movie’s most vocal defenders, is expected to participate in festival events tied to the restoration. Kermode spent years campaigning for a proper release of Russell’s preferred version, arguing that the studio’s edits damaged both the narrative and the artistic intent behind the film.

The restoration itself was completed by Warner Bros. postproduction teams and restored in 4K using archival film materials and remastered audio sourced from original elements.

For longtime fans, the return of The Devils represents more than nostalgia. It signals the rehabilitation of a film once considered too dangerous, too blasphemous, and too politically explosive for mainstream release. Russell himself repeatedly accused Warner Bros. of mutilating the movie before his death in 2011.

The controversy surrounding the film also remains strikingly modern. Many of the themes that fueled outrage in 1971, religious extremism, political manipulation, sexual repression, and weaponized morality, continue to dominate contemporary cultural battles. What was once dismissed as exploitation now appears eerily prophetic.

For horror fans, preservation advocates, and historians of cinema, the rerelease may finally close one of Hollywood’s longest-running censorship wars. And after more than half a century buried beneath cuts, bans, and studio panic, The Devils is returning exactly as Ken Russell intended it to be seen.

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